Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Bear Medicine

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Honey Paw, Lightfoot, Old Man of the Mountains, Big Hairy One. For

Native Americans, and native people across Eurasia, to speak the name

" bear " was to evoke its power. Instead, out of respect for the bears,

they were given nicknames. Grandfather of the Hill, Grandmother, Strong

One, the One Who Owns the Den. These and other nicknames were used by

the Finns, Tungus, Lapps, and Blackfoot Indians, among other tribal

people across the Northern Hemisphere.

 

The bears of this story (a children's book) are brown bears, also known

as grizzly bears in the interior of northwestern North America. From

Scandinavia, clear across Siberia and into North America, they are both

the same species Ursus arctus, which means bear in Latin and Greek,

respectively. For thousands of years, brown bears have evoked fear in

humans and for good reason. They can weigh up to almost one ton (the

Kodiak bear, a brown bear of coastal Alaska, grows larger even tan a

polar bear), run faster than the fastest human, and with a massive paw

smash the spine of a moose. And they are very unpredictable. Yet a

visitor to a national park in bear country is about three hundred times

more likely to be killed by a car than a bear.

 

But fear is not the sole reason why native peoples have respected bears.

Traditionally they have felt kinship with bears, considering them our

closest animal relatives. Indeed one traditional name for bears used by

the Haida is Elder Kinsman. For the Haida and other Pacific Northwest

cultures, bears are a powerful totem and and are important family

crests. To the Cree in Central Canada, bears have been known as

Four-Legged Humans. Like humans, bears are intelligent and curious. They

often stand on their hind legs, walk upright, and pick berries in the

same manner as a person. Like humans, they are omnivores--they can eat

almost anything, preferring highly nutritious food they can get easily

and in large quantity (therefore, except for coastal brown bears with

easy access to salmon, they are 80%-90% vegetarian.) It's understandable

why many tribes would not eat bear meat, believing it was like eating a

person, a relative. The famous naturalist John Muir called bears our

" hairy brothers. " They could as well be called our hairy sisters, or

mothers.

 

Bears are good mothers. Cubs are not born knowing how to be bears; they

must learn from their mothers (the males take no part in rearing cubs).

Cubs nurse for one year, and a yearling would have little chance of

surviving without its mother. But by age two or three years, the young

bear's mother will chase it away; by then, then cub will be ready. It

will be big and strong and smart.

 

Yet in spite of their great strength and intelligence, in the lower

forty-eight states, where there are less than nine hundred left, brown

bears are listed as threatened by the Endangered Species Act. The last

grizzly in the " Golden Bear State " of California was shot in 1922. There

are perhaps fifty left in Norway, three hundred to five hundred in

Finland and Sweden, one hundred in Italy, and one hundred and fifty in

Spain, and only twenty or so survive in France. Thousands roam Alaska,

northwestern Canada, and what was once the Soviet Union, but even in

these areas brown bears are rapidly disappearing. Can we learn once

again to share the land with the bears, as native people once learned?

Grizzlies need space. Can't we afford to give space to Honey Paw and

Lightfoot? Can we afford not to?

 

--Honey Paw and Lightfoot by Jonathan London, illustrated by Jon Van

Zyle

 

Peace to all creatures,

PAMIR

Oasis Reiki Institute

http://www.reikihelp.com

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pamir,

Unfortunately the American govt doesn't hold the grizzly in such high esteem.

They are removing the grizzly from endangered status in Yellowstone, so that

they may timber and search for oil in the surrounding areas. It saddens me

beyond belief that this country does not appreciate the beauty and majesty of

nature.

The bear is also my totem animal, I enjoyed the article and insights. Thank you.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:( makes me very sad too that its loosing it federal protection.

Just goes to show you, its only good to protect when it does not

interfer with making money.

 

Blessings,

Wanda

 

 

 

In , Angela Myal

<acmyal> wrote:

> Pamir,

> Unfortunately the American govt doesn't hold the grizzly in such

high esteem. They are removing the grizzly from endangered status in

Yellowstone, so that they may timber and search for oil in the

surrounding areas. It saddens me beyond belief that this country does

not appreciate the beauty and majesty of nature.

> The bear is also my totem animal, I enjoyed the article and

insights. Thank you. Angie

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...